scorecardresearch
Clear all
Search

COMPANIES

No Data Found

NEWS

No Data Found
Sign in Subscribe
TN water crisis puts rain effect shots in snooze mode in Kollywood

TN water crisis puts rain effect shots in snooze mode in Kollywood

Chennai, Jun 30 (PTI) The acute water crisis in parts of Tamil Nadu has had a cascading effect on the much used "rain effect" shots in Tamil cinema, prompting producers to either avoid such scenes or go in for miniature shower techniques."Rain effect shots are now avoided," film maker G Dhananjayan said, adding water tankers do not cater to thefilm industry, given the acute shortage situation. "Using so much water is also a criminal waste and peoplerealize it. There is awareness," he told PTI. Still, if showers are indispensable for the movie,"ratherthan showing rains drenching a whole building, the same effect is now created by producing a spectacle of rain through a window. This may only require a bucket of water," the filmmaker, who is also the director of Blue Ocean Film andTelevision Academy (BOFTA) here said.On rain effect shots, he said "it sets the tone, creates the mood and it is a character by itself in movies."Film commentator M Bharat Kumar said even before thepresent water crisis hit Tamil Nadu, producers had problems in getting adequate water to create rain effect shots in movies."Water tankers are not reliable always and very rarely did we have water in plenty," he said. Such aspects were among the reasons for film producers to opt for cities like Hyderabad, he said.The rain shots in fight sequences in Ajith starrer"Viswasam" and Rajinikanth's "Kaala" were done in Hyderabad and Mumbai respectively, he added. The acute water scarcity situation has also brought backthe focus on water conservation, with the Tamil version of theBigg Boss show hosted by Kamal Haasan having "water meters," laying emphasis on judicious use of water by inmates.Film director M S Raj said even if rain effect shots wereneeded, it must be postponed till such time the acute crisissituation eased."An artist with conscience will only do that," he said. Despite the scarcity, "you can still source water bymaking a hefty payment and in an industry where even croresare not big, shelling out a few thousands more for water isnot an issue. But it must not be done and we do not do it," hesaid.General Secretary of the Indo Cine Appreciation Foundation, E Thangaraj said, "If you show rain effect today in a Tamil movie, people will laugh at you and I understand that it is being avoided by film makers." Also, he said "rain as an element," in Tamil cinemas hasevolved over the years."Many years ago, rain shots were routinely used inromantic shots and showers were a fixture then for such moods. Now things have changed and directors have scaled down its use, confining rains only to situations where it is really needed," Thangaraj said. PTI VGN APR DVDV

Published on: Jun 30, 2019, 1:18 PM IST
×
Advertisement